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In Seattle

Great-game delayed one day, but here I am, half a mile from campus for the night. I no longer feat 8:30 am classes! w00t. All of the housemates seem pretty chill.

While I have all of the neccesities, there are still a few things I want to get done:

  • Get the landlord to kick the neighbor out of the parking spot I intend to use, which is on this house’s property.
  • Purchase and install a room door lock
  • Transport the bike(s) here (I don’t know if I’ll bring the road bike just yet)
  • Possibly bring Kaleidoscope (my desktop) here. (A guy upstairs has the same speakers as me!)
  • Establish a good routine
  • Sign the lease

I think thats about it… but I’m sure something else will come up as well.

My New Commute to School

0.6 Miles (about 1 minute)

Ok, so I’m four months behind schedule, but, hey, I made it. Hopefully I’ll be sleeping there by Wednesday night.

New Year’s Eve

Woke up late after talking long into the night with Scott Marsh about Mag Lev trains. Next, I wandered off to work for several hours as there is a test currently going on that I am monitoring. After finishing up, I made contact with Scott Torborg and Courtney. I dropped off Courtney’s Christmas gift (finally) and ate a little bit at Thai Ginger in Factoria with her group, which included her boyfriend, Ann, and another friend (an attractive vegetarian Indian girl). I guess I have to hang out with Courtney more often, as the food was good and the company too. After this, I returned home, got stuff ready, and then met Torborg at the Marshes, where we ate good food and had good times.

Eventually, Jonathan arrived and we headed to Seattle where we met with Beth and a friend of hers, Shai, Greg, and Katie and Mike. Beth, Shai, Greg and I took off just before midnight to watch the fireworks off of the Space Needle, which was fun. We then stayed up late having a pretty good time. I then returned home to see a new (loaner) TV, so I ha to watch a movie, which ended up being the always enjoying Pirates of the Caribbean. Then it was now. I think instead of sleep I’ll power thorugh today, which includes church (gotta meet Breein’s lucky guy), perhaps Seahawks with Dan, a short stint at work to replace batteries, and the last TRC leadership meeting before the 2006 FIRST Robotics Kickoff Event.

UPDATE: Well, that plan didn’t work.

First Blog of 2006

Happy New Year!

A Full Day

Yesterday:

5:00am — Woke up after restless sleep. Fifteen minutes before the alarm. No idea why.
6:07am — Left for work after breakfast.
6:30am — Arrived at work, claiming the very best parking spot all to myself.
10:00am — Hour-and-a-half all-hands meeting led by company president.
11:50am — Meeting ends.
12:00pm — Ultimate frisbee with Emulex crew on frozen outfield grass.
1:08pm — Return to work, reclaiming best parking spot!
1:10pm — One hour meeting discussing test results begins.
3:30pm — Meeting ends. (!!!)
3:38pm — Shower, dress.
3:45pm — Left work for an interview with the AirFire team.
4:30pm — Arive at AirFire lab, begin interview.
5:00pm — Leave AirFire, try to find someone willing to go to company party with me.
5:20pm — Maria agrees to go, but she’s Eastside.
6:00pm — Pick Maria up.
6:45pm — Arrive Teatno Zazanni.
6:50pm — Bribe a coworker with four drink coupons to sit at a better seat.
7:00pm — The show begins! The food and entertainment is wonderful!
10:00pm — The show is over. I am satiated. Maria has a long day tomorrow, so we head back.
10:30pm — Drop Maria off.
10:45pm — Arrive home, very tired, with headache (from lack of hydration after frisbee!)
11:45pm — After drifting off on the couch several times, manage to get myself to bed.

Wow!

For Want of Gumption

Sometimes I have been described by associates in the past as having a “bias for action” — a tendency to choose action over inaction. I find this description to be true of many parts of my life, at least when I am thinking rationally. My “whats the worst that could happen” sort of mentality combined with a life experience of nothing that bad ever happening may be responsbile. Or maybe I just like to live life to its fullest, and inaction is not well correlated with fullness. At any rate, this so-called bias for action has tended to serve me well over the years — it is largely responsbile for the outrageously successful Road Trip of 2003, for a slew of road-less-traveled honors courses both in high school and in college that have all paid dividends, for a robotics club that went to the national competition its first year, and for a few speeding tickets as well. Certainly, looking back at my life, just as in looking back at that list, the good has far outweighed the bad.

Unfortunately, this action bias often fails me in two areas. The first is associated primarily with schoolwork — I find myself procrastinating its completion far too often. The bigger the assignment, the more I put it off, only making the problem worse, leading to more procrastination. Of course, usually things eventually reach a tipping point where the rapidly increasing completion panic energy overcomes the negative potential well of procrastination, and I get to work. Unfortunately, this usually means late nights, all-nighters, and substandard product. Of course, as we have seen, my substandard is sometimes somewhat better than average. This, of course, only served to reinforce the acceptability of the process, which has repeated itself many times for many papers and assignments throughout the history of Ryan.

But all of this is just a precursor. This post is not about schoolwork procrastination. This is about my other action-bias failue: namely, anything involving women.

As with most of my posts, there is a recent occurence to illustrate the point particularly well. It all began in my Math 324 class (see previous post to see the Chemistry Library building where I go for this class…). The course title is “Advanced Multivariable Calculus.” Only a few majors recognize it, and fewer yet require it. So basically, you’re either a math major/minor or pretty smart if you’re taking the class. To say it like a crass Yoda, dumb people here, there are not. The point here is that any girl in this class that happens to catch my eye is not only good looking, but she is intelligent as well. Hot and smart. Is there anything better than that? I didn’t think so.

Which brings me to Marissa. After I started having attendance issues in my other “early” (11:30 am) class Math class, I stopped sitting in the front, because I was often coming in late. This put me usually on the second-to-last row, right behind her. Always carrying her decorative coffee cup and taking notes in an artist’s sketchpad, we occasionally exchanged niceties, but never really talked. We were both always late, and she must have had a class right afterwards, as she never stuck around. Until today, that is. And today, we actually talked. Briefly, it is true, but it was good. At the time, I should have been considering, more or less, the following facts:

  • She is hot
  • She is smart
  • Today is the last day I will see her before the final
  • I could really use some motivation in studying for the final
  • I could really use a date to the company Christmas party

Unfortunately, I was apparently only considering the following facts:

So, as the class and conversation ended, this is what came out: “Well, good luck on the final. See you on Wednesday.” And then it was over.

I didn’t even recover enough from the blank mind to kick myself for a good ten minutes.

So now, I either rely on some sort of serendipity, find some way to talk to her before/during/after the final, or give up all hope. And considering past experience, I’m leaning towards the latter.

Driving In Snow

Ah, the thrills of living in the mountains. Indeed, driving home from work today was an experience both frightening and exhilarating. A sure sign that the road is slick is when my 4×4 truck goes up a hill at an angle that isn’t quite straight. Still, I find the experience to be quite a bit of fun when I feel like I’m still in control — more or less — of the vehicle. On the other hand, those times that I’m not so sure I’m in control — even for a split second — are downright spooky. Fortunately, I was able to minimize the later on the slip-‘n-slide up the back side of Cougar Mountain, and the whole experience — including climbing a hill at an angle — turned out to be positive. We’ll see if I still feel this way about it tomorrow morning. :-)